"My daughter came out of the house and said there were gunshots at Tractor Supply. They were heading down there toward Walmart,” said Betsy Gerhardstein.

The teenage victim is Gerhardstein’s neighbor.

"Last night my neighbor called my husband to close up his house. He kind of mentioned it was his son that got hit, apparently possibly with a pellet gun. It went through his skin. I think it lodged in his liver. We're just hoping his son is going to be OK and will make a full recovery,” Gerhardstein said.

One of the motorcyclists, Matthew Woodruff, was shot a short time after the teen.

"I was driving southbound on 27, just cruising along and all of a sudden severe pain in my bottom just appeared out of nowhere," Woodruff said. "I immediately pulled over and I managed to maintain control of the motorcycle and not crash luckily and that's when I saw the blood."

Woodruff was hit in his left buttock, treated at an area hospital and released Sunday night.

"It felt like a gunshot, it really did," Woodruff said. "It is four inches deep in the flesh so I got to go see a surgeon next week to try to get it removed."

Police said motorcyclist Gary Wilson was also shot within 10 minutes of the second shooting.

Wilson was hit in his back near his right shoulder blade. Wilson told WLWT he initially thought he was hit by a rock.

"So I went home and I took my shirt off I looked and there's a hole in it, looked at my back, there's a hole in it, blood on the shirt," Wilson said. "To me it's some young person, either that or they're a psycho because I mean you go around shooting people, that's weird."

Police are looking for two vehicles that might be connected to the shooting.

Investigators are looking for a 2002 to 2005 silver Hyundai Sonata. Police said it was viewed on surveillance video exiting Wendy's and turning behind Wilson's motorcycle.

Two more vehicles were described to police by the teenage victim. A black Jeep, possibly a Patriot or Compass model with tinted windows and a black four door sedan without tinted windows.

Anyone with information is asked to contact the Campbell County Dispatch Center at 859-292-3622.